- Organization | Elements on the page will have to shift as the screen size changes, but they need to remain in a logical reading order. Some elements may even be able to go away when real estate gets tight.
- Navigation | The navigation of choice seems to be a menu button with a drop down navigation list that appears when clicked/tapped. Because my site will only have a few page categories, I may be able to get away with keeping them all on the screen as opposed to hiding them behind a button. My logic says that if I can prevent the user from having to tap or click any more than necessary - without making them scroll for day just to get beyond the navigation - then visible buttons will be the way to go.
- Typography | The type will likely need to scale down in many places as the design scales. A few sites that I looked at however, had type that scaled exactly as the page did. That means that some of the small copy became so tiny for mobile devices that it was barely readable. Scaling type to an extent, and then redesigning to accommodate larger type on smaller devices seems like a better solution.
- Spacing and Proportion | All items may not scale proportionally and still look pleasing. Some images may need to stay a bit large, others may just go away once they've scaled to a certain point. Also, spacing that works for the desktop version may feel too generous for a mobile device. Other items began to feel very cramped as they shifted from multi-column to single-column without any change in organization or spacing.
Sunday, August 25, 2013
Responsively Designed Sites
In preparation of designing my own responsive portfolio site, I found that the best way to understand the considerations of a scalable site was to look at as many as possible and write a list of things that bothered me, or things that were especially delightful. The main issues I encountered revolved around:
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